The Ledger is almost up to present. This year’s volume is currently the only thing we have left to enter, so check it out here. If you’ve tried to use our catalog today, you know our server is hiccupy, so stay with us while we go through the pains of updating.
Author: bbaile14
If You Dig This Blog…
…here’s a better attended library blog from K-State: Talking in the Library. Between our posts here, it’s a great time killer, and helpful for your general informationing needs. The video? It’s just bonus.
Japanese Internment Photos in BotD
It is a shameful part of American history often brushed under the rug too easily considering what was happening on enemy soil at the time. Nonetheless, during World War II, following the attacks on Pearl Harbor, the United States government thought rounding up everyone of Japanese descent would keep us safe.
Though there is little collected, some material recording this 3+ year forced relocation has survived. In Moving Pictures: Photography and the Japanese American Incarceration, Jasmine Alinder collects some of these images to present a view from the inside of what was happening. To learn more, also check out Time of Fear in our DVD section.
Book of the Day: Tri-State Tornado
I’m told (by my little sister when I moved here) that Overland Park is in the heart of Tornado Alley. Aside from the fact that she is 12, it is worth noting that the Tri-State Tornado, the nation’s worst tornado disaster, occurred in Missouri, Illinois, and Indiana. In your face, 12 year-old!
In all seriousness, Tri-State Tornado: The Story of America’s Greatest Tornado Disaster recaps and examines the night in 1925 that claimed nearly 700 Midwestern lives in just 3 hours. That is absolutely crazy. The author, Peter Felknor, was able to secure interviews with 14 survivors. As a native Missourian, Felknor had heard stories of the tornado and went on to get college degrees in the field of atmospheric sciences. The book is available today at the library, as indicated by our New Books RSS feed (to your right in the blog, folks: subscribe!)
Digital Resource Usage
In checking out the digital projects we provide (not subscriptions like journals or e-books), we found some interesting things.
First, the most popular resource we have is our LibGuides collection, which received an insane number of hits over the last two years. The most popular guides are the Gay and Lesbian Film Guide, Autism & Asperger Syndrome Guide, Graphic Novels, and Italian Films & Music. Now, we made the Autism guide in conjunction with the Autism conference held on campus, so we knew that it would be popular, and the graphic novel guide is one of our oldest. The biggest from the guides was the Italian Films & Music resource.
Now, even though those guides got good hits, our college repository, ScholarSpace, had a few articles with significant downloads. Hopefully this raises awareness of the resources we have, and hopefully gets more contributors as time goes on.
Here are the Top 20 individual resources:
- Gay and Lesbian Film Guide (LibGuide)
- Autism & Asperger Syndrome (LibGuide)
- Graphic Novels (LibGuide)
- Italian Films and Music (LibGuide)
- World War II Novels (LibGuide)
- The Interactive Research Guide: Will Function Bring Users Content? A Project Model Illustrated by a Proposed Paper-Writing Guide (article by Barry J. Bailey)
- Taking Sides (LibGuide)
- Into the Great Wide Open… (presentation by Nick Greenup)
- Holocaust Fiction (LibGuide)
- This Month (Campus Publication): February 2008 (full issue in ScholarSpace)
- Japanese Films and Music (LibGuide)
- Chinese Film and Music (LibGuide)
- Library Newsletter: Spring 2008 (newsletters are stored in ScholarSpace)
- Novels About Aging (LibGuide)
- Fighting Neurelitism (article by Mark A. Foster from campus publication Many Voices)
- Informé 2007 (field report by William McFarlane)
- Ethical Dilemmas in Film (LibGuide)
- Anthropology Fiction (LibGuide)
- The Rolling Stone: Fiscal Close and Fund Structure Design (presentation by Judi Guzzy)
- Muslim World: Film and Music (LibGuide)
Welcome Back
So, hey, what’s up?
Welcome to the first day of Fall Semester ’09! The library has a lot of new resources like Mango (learn languages… lots of them!), new LibGuides to help you research, and plenty of new books to help you cheat… at video games.
Okay, you have to do your own coursework… but we’re certainly here to help you along the way.
And we’re able to be reached multiple ways:
- Leave a Facebook note
- Reply or Direct Message @jccclib on Twitter
- Use our chat client (to your right!)
- Shoot us an e-mail
- We also still answer the phone
- And we exist in person
Despite the weather today, it’s going to be a good year.
SIDLIT is Go
Follow our twitter feed, http://twitter.com/jccclib for updates from the conference! Should be good!
Yes, They Are Real
We’ve installed these things called Cones of Silence into our media area. The idea is that you can play something with audio underneath one and it will limit the sound to you and the person right next to you.
If that didn’t sound too sci-fi for you, please gander at these photos of our 3 Cone of Silence stations.
Try’em out, let us know how they work.
Campus Ledger: Summer Reading
“Beta” seems to be the excuse for “things don’t quite work perfect yet.” Well, here’s one of those excuses.
The Campus Ledger, JCCC’s student newspaper is now available online from beginning to 2006. Peruse it here before we get it ready to announce across campus. We’ll build it a pretty search page and gussy it up for prime time. It is just a long time comin’.
Accidental Billionaires
Chances are that you, your kid, your brother, or plenty of other people you know use Facebook. This library even has a Facebook page. But what’s funny is that the two founders of one of the most recognized social networking tools don’t even really like each other. at least, that’s what Ben Mezrich’s book, Accidental Billionaires, claims. In it, you’ll discover an account that begins with the hacking of a Harvard student image database to rank how hot the female students are, and ends with the youngest billionaire ever. That’s a lot of ground to cover in the middle, but should be an interesting read for anyone with a Facebook profile or an interest in social networking.
Or getting rich quick.